But there are some outliers. There are a bunch of great apps that happen to be Android exclusives. Check them out.

Ingress is a unique real-world scavenger hunt game.

Ingress is a sci-fi game that sends you on a scavenger hunt through the real world to find 'hidden' virtual goodies.

Google developed the game. Here's the plot:

'A mysterious energy has been unearthed by a team of scientists in Europe. The origin and purpose of this force is unknown, but some researchers believe it is influencing the way we think. We must control it or it will control us.'

So, basically, you run around your town trying to find this illusive 'energy' before the bad guys do.

Facebook Home turns your home screen into a Facebook photo gallery

Facebook Home adds a Facebook-powered wrapper to your Android phone. Instead of seeing your normal lock screen, you get a beautiful slide show of your friends' Facebook photos and status updates. You can comment and like those updates directly from the lock screen without opening the regular Facebook app.

Google Skymap lets you know exactly which star you're staring up at.

Llama Location Profiles uses where you are to change aspects of your phone like ringer and Bluetooth

Llama is a nifty app that automatically switches specific phone settings depending on where you are. You can automatically silence your phone when you arrive at your office or turn Bluetooth on at 7 am to pair with your headphones for a morning run.

Best of all, the app doesn't use your phone's GPS, which can drain your battery. Instead, it uses cell towers in your area to figure out where you are.

BetterBatteryStats helps you spend more time unplugged.

BetterBatteryStats lets you analyse your phone's behaviour, pinpointing exactly which applications are causing your battery to drain. Once you know what the culprit is you can specifically fix the issue.

Robin is a great alternative to Apple's Siri

Before Google Now, Robin was the first true Siri challenger.

We love the expanded capabilities of the newer virtual assistant. You can ask Robin for directions, local places, real-time parking, traffic info, gas prices, weather, your Twitter news, and much more.

Robin is disrupting the personal assistant arena, and we only hope that her existence pushes developers to make personal assistant apps feel more like true personal assistants.